[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 177 (Friday, November 18, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7826-S7827]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL ADOPTION MONTH
Mr. JOHNSON of South Dakota. Mr. President, I rise today to
acknowledge November as National Adoption Month and National Adoption
Day on Nov. 19, 2011. With over 107,000 children waiting to be adopted
from the U.S. foster care system, I think it is crucial to celebrate
the parents, social workers, judges, lawyers, teachers, doctors,
nurses, police officers, and other dedicated advocates who help
children find safe, permanent and loving homes.
It seems quite appropriate that as we prepare to celebrate
Thanksgiving, we also celebrate the ways in which families grow through
adoption. My own family has been personally touched by adoption, and I
can't express enough the positive impact that adoption can have on
children and families.
Together, National Adoption Month and National Adoption Day aim to
raise awareness of the 408,000 children living in the nation's foster
care system and encourage individuals to consider opening their homes
and hearts through adoption. Each year more than 20,000 children age
out of the foster care system without finding a permanent family to
call their own. The majority of these children struggle to
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meet the demands of adult life on their own. Only 50 percent earn a
high school diploma, barely 3 percent go on to obtain a college degree,
and one out of four will experience homelessness at some point in their
lives. While we generally recognize adult independence at age 18,
children rarely stop needing the stability, support and guidance that
families provide. The benefits of being adopted into a loving home
extend well into adulthood.
Each year I recognize one South Dakota family as Angels in Adoption
in order to highlight the many ways in which exemplary individuals and
families across the State have made a positive impact in the lives of
children through adoption. I recently had the opportunity to honor Nora
and Randy Boesem of Newell, SD, as Angels in Adoption. Nora and Randy
have adopted nine children, all of whom are affected by Fetal Alcohol
Spectrum Disorders and face a range of physical and mental birth
defects that occur as a result of alcohol use during pregnancy. In
addition to their adopted children, the Boesems have opened their home
to nearly 70 children in foster care over the last 10 years.
As a founding member of the bipartisan Congressional Coalition on
Adoption, which sponsors Angels in Adoption, I am committed to
assisting children in the United States to find stable, loving and
permanent homes. Additionally, I support the goals of National Adoption
Day, which encourage others to adopt children from foster care, build
stronger ties between local adoption agencies, courts and adoption
advocacy organizations, and learn more about children waiting to be
adopted and the families looking to grow through adoption.
I was proud to support the Fostering Connections to Success and
Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 and the recent passage of the Child
and Family Services Improvement and Innovation Act, which made some of
the most important improvements to the foster care and adoption system
we have seen in the last 10 years. I am also proud that Members of the
Senate continue to support ways to make adoption easier and more
affordable. Since the cost of adoption can be very high, we ought to do
what we can to minimize this initial burden for the exceptional people
who provide caring homes for children. Adoption proceedings and legal
fees for some domestic adoptions can cost more than $40,000. If we ask
individuals to care for and adopt children, we must provide some relief
from the financial burdens associated with that care. The adoption tax
credit is an effective way to help lessen the financial burden families
face when adopting a child and I support making the adoption tax credit
permanent.
The commitment of adoptive parents in South Dakota and throughout our
country to provide children with safe, permanent, and loving homes
will, of course, have a positive impact on their lives. As we celebrate
National Adoption Month and National Adoption Day on November 19, 2011,
I call on my colleagues to continue finding ways to support the
children, parents, and other important players involved in the child
welfare system and to work to ensure all children have stable,
permanent and loving families.
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